Bill Snyder Family Stadium is the home of the Kansas State Wildcats football team in Manhattan, Kansas. It anchors the Wildcats' program and is named for the Hall of Fame coach who led Kansas State's dramatic turnaround, and on fall Saturdays it becomes one of the loudest, purple-soaked atmospheres in the Big 12. The stadium's east and west stands rise close to the field, amplifying crowd noise for opposing offenses.
Originally opened in 1968 as KSU Stadium and later renamed for Bill Snyder, the venue became known as the site of one of college football's greatest program rebuilds, as Snyder turned a long-downtrodden Wildcats team into a perennial bowl contender. It hosted the first-ever Big 12 Conference athletic competition on August 31, 1996, and was the site of a 35-7 win over top-ranked Oklahoma in the 2003 Big 12 Championship Game. A 53,811-strong crowd for a 2000 win over Nebraska remains the largest in the stadium's history, and Snyder retired with 215 career wins and two Big 12 titles.
Source: RateGame editorial